Jump to content

St Mary's College, Hull

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Livingdeaddolls (talk | contribs) at 15:57, 10 June 2009 (External links). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

St. Mary's Sports College
Address
Map
Cranbrook Avenue

, ,
HU6 7TN

Information
TypeSecondary school
MottoPer Mariam Ad Jesum
Established1960
Head teacherMr. G. Fitzpatrick
Age11 to 19
Websitehttp://www.stmaryscollegehull.co.uk/

St. Mary's Sports College is a mixed Catholic secondary school and sixth form college in Kingston upon Hull, East Riding of Yorkshire, England. It was formed following an amalgamation between the former St Mary's RC girls High School and Marist College RC High School for boys. In 2002, 'The Academy' was built, a state of the art sports centre for members of the school to use and members of the public to use outside of school hours.

St. Mary's is the only state school with on site post 16 provision in the local authority.

Subjects and courses

St. Mary's Sports College has many courses at different levels to choose from. They have for the school, years 7 to 11 the core subjects, Maths, English and Science. Religious Education (RE) and Physical Education (PE) are also compulsory for years 7 - 11 at the school.

The Sixth Form College, ages 16-19 offers many courses to choose from to meet students' needs whether it be a A-Level Course or a BTEc First or BTEc National course. A-Level courses offered are: English Language, English Literature, Law, Chemistry, Applied Science, German, French, Spanish, Psychology, Maths, Sociology, Government and Politics and Philosophy and Ethics, Applied ICT, Applied Business Studies. As well as St. Marys Sports College being a Sports College (Hence the name), it is also a Roman Catholic College, so in Sixth form, one hour a week of gerneral RE is compulsory unless A-Level RE (Philosophy & Ethics)is chosen as an option or five subjects are studied as opposed to four.